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Published byJohnathan Ralf Wheeler Modified over 9 years ago
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Lecture
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whether to build closer links to Europe or Asia Not quite European; not quite Asian European and Asian continents are sometimes treated as one mega-continent called Eurasia
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Natural physical barrier between Europe and Asia the choice of the Ural Mountains was largely arbitrary and based on history and politics. If there is Eurasia as continent, then this would be biggest with 4 B population
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Straddles in two continents: Europe and Asia Its former Russian Empire straddled in three continents: 1. Europe in the west 2. Asian Russia in the east 3. North America where it had Russian American colonies in Alaska and Northern California.
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Realm- geographical division of earth’s surface; “imagined” boundaries; fluid; may cut across regional divisions or countries “imagined communities” (Benedict Andersen) Covers European and Asian countries
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1924-1989 – USSR or Soviet Russia World Power emanating from the Kremlin that destroyed Hitler and the Third Reich (Empire) USSR as the Third Empire; first and second are the Holy Roman Empire and the German Empire USSR collapsed in 1989
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State-run collective farms Communal ownership (communism); no private ownership; “from each according to his ability to each according to his need”- Karl Marx
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Communism- Means of production is owned by the masses Class struggle Socialism-social ownership of the means of production and cooperative management of the economy
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Authoritarian govt Best goods and services go the government Focused on production quota Also rife with corruption much like capitalism
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Gorbachev dissolved the Central Committee then he resigned; dissolved all party units Supreme Soviet indefinitely suspended all CPSU activity on Soviet territory ending communist rule in 1991.
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cultural trauma; created a political vacuum Russia, however, did not retreat from the European geographical space Political boundaries prove to be elusive and fluid
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1. ethnically based domestic and international military conflicts in Caucasus, Moldova, Tajikistan and Chechnya
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2. still weak new independent states: Georgia, Krygyztan, Tajikistan
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3. repressions against liberal and religious opposition: Azerbajian, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan
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4. instability of borders with countries outside the former Soviet Union; illegal immigration and narcotics trafficking in Sino-Russian and Tajik-Afgan borders
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5. human and sex trafficking (women and children)
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Opulence of Tsars vs. abject poverty massespeople
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